2019 World Cup in England set to be 10-team format: ICC

ISLAMABAD: ICC’s Chief Executive Officer Dave Richardson has said that the game’s governing body is all set to prune the number of teams from 14 to 10 for the next Cricket World Cup, scheduled to be held in England in 2019.

There is a possibility that the ICC World T20 will be made a 16-team event which would encourage some of the lower rung teams to get a taste of competitive cricket, Dave Richardson the CEO of ICC told Press Trust of India during an interview on Monday.

The members of the ICC Executive Board will meet for a “Strategic Review Meeting” in which the members are likely to agree to a 10-team format rather than existing 14 team structure, which makes it a cumbersome seven-week long tournament with a number of inconsequential matches.

“The way we are going, I believe we need to consolidate things to ensure that there is more competition amongst teams at the highest level. If we get a 10-team World Cup, all 10 teams must be capable of winning the tournament.”

“Like in 1992, we had a nine-team format, where everyone played each other. It was by far the most exciting World Cup where it was difficult to predict the four semi-finalists.

So we are hopeful that 10-team format might work,” the former South Africa wicketkeeper sounded positive about the downsizing of teams.

Richardson said that ICC’s main aim would be to have a “more targeted approach where the countries doing well should be rewarded adequately”.

“If we have Test cricket, our aim is to make sure that all our 10 Full Members are capable of beating each other.

Similarly, the ICC thinks that World T20 must be a tournament featuring something in the range of 16 countries.

We want a targetted approach in order to create more competitive teams at the higher level. Teams like Ireland and Afghanistan need to be rewarded,” he said.

This is a strategic review of the ICC Board that happens every five years.

Whether it will be a four-year plan or an eight-year plan has still not been decided. But we need to pretty much put a process in place,” concluded Richardson.